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Thursday 171109

0

As many rounds as possible in 14 minutes of:
9 Bar facing burpees
12 Power snatch, 95#(65#)
15 Wall balls, 20#(14#)

Post rounds and reps to comments and BTWB

The evening Sprint class putting some miles on those assault bikes.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Over the past several weeks/ months we have been squatting regularly on Mondays. This squat session is currently disguised as a clean and jerk. Included in these days we sprinkled in the odd single leg step up, some funky weighted side lunges, may be even a double KB swing. . . who knows. We got crazy. . . or did we? Perhaps there was a reason for our actions, a method behind the madness if you will. While we know we can improve our squat by squatting, there are other things we can do a bit more regularly that can aid in our squat gains, without the potential issues that can come with getting below parallel a few too many times. Because squatting too much is actually a thing, I swear. Puori offers up 5 simple suggestions that can help us in our squat gains.

How to PR Your Squat: 5 Simple Suggestions By Puori

At certain checkpoints throughout the year I encourage the athletes I coach to list training goals they want to work toward over the next few months. One common theme I’ve recognized, whether they’re a weekend warrior or Regionals hopeful, is that people want to get stronger. Other than muscle-ups, highest on people’s lists for improvement are the Olympic lifts: the snatch and clean and jerk.

While there are a lot of ways for someone to improve their technique to lift more weight, good technique will only bring you so far. While technique work should never be neglected, as someone whose own progress has stagnated in the Olympic lifts, I can attest that sometimes you just need to build raw strength in order to move that heavier barbell.

Specifically what I’ve been focusing on lately is improving my front and back squats which have, not surprisingly, also plateaued for over a year now. I can currently clean and jerk 15 pounds less than my lifetime max front squat. I can catch more weight in the clean but won’t have the legs to stand it up so I know that (lack of) leg strength is limiting my progress.

In addition to the Olympic lifts, squats have a tremendous amount of carry-over to overall performance in CrossFit. If you look at the 12 foundational CrossFit Movements, three are squat variations (air squat, front squat, overhead squat), three more have a squatting component (medball clean, wall ball, thruster) and two rely more on an aggressive leg drive (push press and push jerk), which rely on leg strength.

There’s no denying that strong legs are an important component for success in weightlifting and in Crossfit. So how does one go about gaining this coveted leg strength?

1. Perfect Your Technique

I always find it amusing when someone says they want a double bodyweight back squat yet their air squat resembles that of my dog’s posture while she goes to the bathroom. I hate to be the bearer of bad news but if you cannot execute a basic bodyweight air squat then you have no business squatting with a barbell.

Instead, goblet squats or squats hugging a heavy medicine ball are great variations that allow someone to add weight to the squat while still promoting proper mechanics. Here are 5 squat mistakes you might be making — if there’s anything we’ve learned from seeing Murph at the Games for the last two years it’s that no matter how high you climb in this sport you better have a good air squat.

2. Squat More

Now that your technique is dialed in it’s time to put it to good use. If you’re only squatting once every two weeks then you’re simply not maximizing the rate at which you can improve. It sounds like a straightforward concept: squat more to improve your squat. But some people might hear they need to squat more and immediately jump into a Smolov cycle or find a Bulgarian program that has them maxing out nearly every day, which I very highly discourage.

This concept of “more” does have a limit at which squatting too often and too much volume will inhibit your progress because you simply won’t be able to recover. The weights, reps and sets you choose should vary as you progress through a cycle. I’ve found that training the squat two to three days a week is plenty, especially for CrossFit athletes that are inevitably acquiring additional squatting volume in the form of thrusters, wall balls, cleans and snatches during WODs.

Of course there are lots of tried and true programs out there such as the Texas method, 5-3-1 and Hatch to name a few. But if you find that after completing a volume-based program you still aren’t seeing progress then this is where adding more variety in the program can be very beneficial. Doing tempo variations such as eccentrics and pauses is a great way to add variety and challenge your muscles to break through that plateau.

As with anything, it’s paramount that whatever approach you choose you ease into it. If you’re currently only squatting once every few weeks then increase it to once every week for three to four weeks and see how you feel. Then bump it up to twice a week for a few weeks and again see how your body responds. The fastest way to impede your progress is by getting injured. So as you increase your squat volume it’s important to listen to your body and remember to deload by backing off the volume and intensity every few weeks to allow your body to recover.

3. Train Single Leg Movements

There are so many benefits to training single leg exercises that go beyond building leg strength. For one they allow you to train your legs without taxing your body as much as barbell squats. Doing single leg exercises will help even out imbalances between your legs, keep your joints healthy by requiring you to engage different muscles than with a traditional front or back squat and force you to learn how to properly stabilize your joints since you need to balance on one foot.

Among my favorites are box step-ups, lunges and Bulgarian split squats. All of these movements should be done regularly and be used as strength exercises if done weighted by holding dumbbells but should be done with just bodyweight as a warm-up before squatting to promote mobility.

4. Hip Thrusts

The glutes and quads are the primary muscle groups working during a squat. One of the most common technique faults I see during squatting is excessive forward tracking of the knee which is a default for people who like to rely more heavily on their quads instead of engaging their glutes. Doing so is going to not only put excess strain on your knees but by not fully engaging one of the most powerful muscle groups, your glutes, you are definitely not lifting to your true capacity.

What I love about the hip thrust is that it isolates the glute max and has actually been shown to create greater activation of the glute max compared to during a barbell back squat (1). Doing a few sets of hip thrusts as glute activation, either unweighted with a band around your knees or with a barbell as shown in the video, will allow you to recruit more power from your glutes during your squats.

5. Good Mornings/Reverse Hypers

Good mornings and reverse hypers are essential accessory movements that are superior at building posterior chain strength. Strong legs do nothing if you don’t have the core strength to support a heavy barbell on your shoulders. Reverse hypers provide decompression of the spine, as well as simultaneously strengthening your spinal erectors and low back.

For rehab and therapeutic effects, Louie Simmons (who invented the machine) recommends four sets of 20-25 reps with very light weight (no more than 25% of your max back squat) and for strengthening prescribes four sets of 10 reps at up to 50% of your max back squat.

While reverse hypers are excellent for building posterior chain strength, the expensive price tag makes them rare to come by. A great substitute that will provide all of the posterior strengthening are good mornings. These are great for developing the glutes and hamstrings, developing proper hinging patterns and training your spinal erectors as stabilizers. If you’ve never done a good morning I recommend starting with a banded version. As you feel more confident in your technique move up to an empty barbell and slowly add weight as your back gets stronger.

It’s important to keep in mind that the more experienced you become the harder you have to work to make smaller margins of progress as your body adapts to training. Whatever program led to your 20# PR last winter might not lead to any improvement at all the second time around. Next time you find that your progress has stalled mix up the program with some tempo work and accessory exercises. As with any exercise focus on the quality of movement and achieving full range of motion for maximum benefit.

 

 

 

 

 

Monday 171106

0

In 15 minutes build to a heavy 1 rep clean and jerk

Rest 5:00 then,

Every 2 minutes for 5 rounds:
2 Cleans + 1 jerk @ 60%, 65%, 70%, 75%, 75% of today’s heaviest lift

Post loads to comments and BTWB

Raise your hand if you are excited about kids doing CrossFit!!!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Folks!! Verve is hosting a FREE CrossFit Kids Open House! This will give everyone with kids (members, friends, family of members!) an opportunity to bring their younger ones to the gym and let them have some fun with special guest, Coach Haley D. Hopefully we can get them interested in fitness and hanging out at Verve with a regular CrossFit Kids program in the future!

When: Saturday 18th and Saturday 25th
Time: 8am-9am
Who: Kids ages 4-12 years old
How to RSVP: You can comment in the FB Verve social post or send an email to info@crossfitverve.com. Please let us know 1) how many kids, 2) ages, 3) which days they will be coming. That’s it!

Got a question?? Again, you can comment in Verve social or send an email, we will get you taken care of.

-November 11thVerve In The Community Event!! Verve will be volunteering with “A Little Help”. A Little Help goes into different communities and helps senior citizens with basic chores including maintenance, cleaning, organization, and yard work.

  • TimeSaturday, November 11th from 8am – 12pm
  • How: Click here for details on where to meet and to register
    ***NOTE: YOU MUST REGISTER ON THE WEBSITE IF YOU PLAN ON VOLUNTEERING.

-November 15th- Paul finishes up his 3 part nutrition series with his 3rd and final nutrition talk. The talk will begin @ 7:30pm. This talk is free to Verve members and $10 for non-members. Everyone can sing up for this talk in MBO.

-November 16th- Chris Juestel and Mobile Body Metrics will be at Verve with their Bod Pod technology to provide body composition testing. Want to sign up? Click HERE, scroll down the page to the November 16th date on the calendar, you’ll see CrossFit Verve.  Click the date and you’ll be given instructions on how to sign up for the test. We have 2 time blocks for the day, one in the morning and one in the afternoon/early evening.  Chris is open to being here throughout the day, if the demand warrants it, so please email him through his site should you have a question about another time slot during the day.  The price for the test is $50. Follow up sessions within 6 months are $40.  We have already planned for additional visits approximately every 3 months. 

-November 23rd- Thanksgiving Day, stay tuned for an abbreviated schedule.

-The weekend of December 9th-10th, Verve will be hosting a Level 2 Certificate Course

The Level 2 Certificate Course is an intermediate- level seminar that builds on the concepts and movements introduced at the Level 1 Certificate Course. 

This course is ideally suited for any CrossFit trainer serious about delivering quality coaching. Students enhance their understanding of the CrossFit methodology, program design and implementation, and they advance their skills while coaching others in movements and workouts. Students need to come prepared to be heavily engaged; each leads individual and small-group training sessions, and classroom sessions are discussion-based. Peers and instructors provide feedback and evaluation.

For additional information and to register, click here.

Sunday 171105

0

In teams complete the following for time:
100 Calories on the assault bike (switch every 10 calories)
100 x 10 Meter prowler pushes
80 Calories on the assault bike (switch every 10 calories)
80 x 10 Meter prowler pushes
60 Calories on the assault bike (switch every 10 calories)
60 x 10 Meter prowler pushes

Post times to comments and BTWB

Christine has been gone for work for 5 long weeks. But now she’s back, and our hearts are complete. #SexyFaceSunday

Thursday 171102

0

In 12 Minutes build to a heavy 1 rep shoulder press

Rest 5:00 then,

As many rounds as possible in 5 minutes of:
10 Dumbbell shoulder press 40#(25#)
30 Double unders

Post loads to comments and BTWB

A little #tbt to Mike entertaining all the ladies.

Today’s blog is going to be a #tbt all around. Not because I’m lazy but because something happened, again. And I already wrote a response to that same something the last time it happened. So you can think of it as a fun loving reminder, for those of you who remember the last time. Or it will be a lovely new introduction of information about the ever dreaded “progressive scaling” and how it is the gateway drug to rhabdo. 

There’s scaling and there’s progessive scaling. . . and there in lies the danger 

By Courtney “if it’s worth saying, it’s worth saying twice” Shepherd

CrossFit’s mantra: Mechanics, consistency, and then intensity. That is the simplest way of saying, we want to see it done right, we want to see it done right a lot, and then we will add complexity/ difficulty to it. What is “it”? “It” is anything we do in CrossFit. Rowing, running, lifting weights, pull-ups, push-ups. . . everything we do has a technique to it, has a way it can be performed with the most efficiency, mechanical advantage, and functionality. It can take a few minutes to find those consistent mechanics in some movements, ie the box jump, and it can take a lifetime of work just to get close to thinking you might be average at others, ie the snatch. In class we warm-up movements, we drill the set up and execution, we cue and correct faults in the movement, the goal is through the course of your CrossFit journey to improve your mechanics, more consistently, so we can add intensity.

What is intensity? It is the independent variable most commonly associated with maximizing the rate of return of favorable adaptation. Excuse-a-what? Intensity is what gets you the results you seek. If the WOD was 100 pull-ups, in as much time as you need, it is very fair to say someone would take an entire hour, if not more, to do those 100 pull-ups. Doing 100 mechanically sound pull-ups in an hour is more like skill work, allowing someone to take any needed rest to assure every pull-up is a good one. But the lack of intensity does not favor adaption to improving the ability to do a lot of pull-ups in a short period of time. On the flip side, if the WOD is 100 pull-ups, in 3 minutes, no matter the cost. People will move, things will get intense but I think this time we can agree, there are many that would be hucking their body around the pull-up bar doing things that look nothing like a pull-up. This excessive intensity at the expense of sound mechanics also does not favor adaptation,  because constantly doing a movement really bad over and over and over again will not one day make you good at that movement. So what are we suppose to do? How do we blend these concepts? We scale the intensity to meet the individual person’s needs. Intensity comes in all forms: more weight, more reps, more time. So to scale someone we can lighten the load, take away a few reps, shorten the time. We can even change the movement or assist the movement. No muscle-ups? We can work on the parts that make up a muscle-up, pull-ups and dips. No pull-ups? We can assist the movement with jumping, bands, or using ring rows. We want you to move well, we want you to keep moving well throughout the workout, and we want you to keep moving well throughout the workout with as much intensity as possible. 

CrossFit is infinitely scaleable. Scaling does not mean we are weak, less of an athlete, or somehow inferior. Scaling is a tool used to help us grow as athletes, increase our strength and capacity, and keep us safe. If you are new to CrossFit, fresh from the foundations program, you may be given fewer rounds, reps, or weight. If you were once a collegiate athlete and find yourself de-conditioned and getting back into working out, you may be given fewer rounds, reps, or weight. If you are recovering from an injury, along with the above, you will also get modified movements to support your rehabilitation. Scaling should never be looked at as a negative thing or something to be avoided at all costs. 

Clearly I’m a fan of the concept of scaling, but something came up in class today that really prompted this post, and that is the concept of progressive scaling. I am not a fan of progressive scaling. In today’s class we had strict ring dips. Someone said they planned to do as many unassisted ring dips as possible until they no longer could, and then they would simply add a band to assist them. Well if I agreed to let this happen (which I did not) then what do we think this athlete would do when they start failing with the first band? My guess, add a second band, to assist the movement further. This folks is progressive scaling. This is a recipe for rhabdo. Going to failure in a movement is your body telling you “that’s it, I don’t have any more”. You adding more assistance to the movement is you telling your body “nope, we are still in this”. When you continue to fail and continue to add more assistance you are literally defying your body’s abilities. You are pushing it beyond it’s actual physical capacity. There is no good outcome that will result from this situation. Muscles fatigue during workouts, it’s okay to adjust a scale or add one during a workout to account for this, but as athletes we cannot go to total muscle failure and progressively scale through it. What would the options have been then for this athlete? Start with one band and use it for the whole workout. If at the end of the workout the athlete crushed all the reps in all the rounds, then perhaps next time we don’t use the band, or we use less of a band. Or don’t use the band in the beginning. But when failure sets in, we need to make a change. We can cut reps, we can move to push-ups (so pushing in a different plane). This also happens a lot with pull-ups. We start with no band, we get mid way through the workout, fail, and grab a band. What band do we grab? The least helpful one possible because we are still clinging to the idea of being as close to the actual pull-up as possible. A few reps in we fail at that, so we go grab another band. . . another tiny little band that will give us just enough help to get through the next few reps before we contemplate the next band we grab. WORST. IDEA. EVER. Over scaling ourselves at the beginning of a workout pays off a lot better than progressively scaling throughout a workout. 

Feel like you are always over scaling? Feel like you are never really sure what you should do? Can’t remember what you did last time so you aren’t sure what you should do this time? There is a very elegant solution to this conundrum. WRITE YOUR STUFF DOWN (anyone that actually knows me, knows I didn’t really mean to say the word “stuff”). People, log your workouts. Put it in a logbook that is always on hand. Sign up for Beyond The Whiteboard and log it online (Verve members get a free subscription through Verve, email eric@crossfit.com to get more info). When you log your workout write down what you used for equipment, weights, movements. How many reps did you do unbroken? How did you feel? Was there an “aha” moment that helped you get through the workout?

Dear logbook, today I did 8 rounds of 5 strict ring dips with 1 light purple band. I did all 5 strict ring dips unbroken for all 8 rounds. They felt really fast and I did not stuck mid dip once. I think I’m becoming what Courtney would describe as a strict ring dip ninja. I love CrossFit. I love strict ring dips. I hope they love me back. 

With this knowledge at my finger tips, the next time a workout comes up with approx 40 strict ring dips throughout the workout, guess what I’m going to do? Try doing them without something less than a light purple band. Because I know, if I possibly do them in sets of 5, I have the potential to be successful. Boom.

[drops mic, steps off soap box]

Scale. Move well, a lot of the time, and quickly. Write the results of that down AND refer back to it often. Use that info to help guide your future decisions. Rinse and repeat. 

After mentioning the word “rhabdo” in class on this ring dip day, someone in class said “What’s rhabdo?” To which I replied, “it’s a medical issue we refer to often that can result from progressive scaling.” The next response was “I’ve never heard you mention it before.” This made me take pause, as I know, for myself, I mention rhabdo every time we program a workout with dips, HSPUs, lots of pull-ups, and GHD sit-ups. So if you’ve never heard it mentioned, then apparently I have some work to do. . . stay tuned for next Thursday when I answer the question that was posed to me, “What is rhabdo?” and more importantly, “why should I care about it?”. 

 

Monday 171030

0

In 15 minutes build to a heavy 1 rep clean and jerk

Rest 5:00

Then, every 2 minutes for 5 rounds:
2 Cleans + 1 Jerk @ 55%, 60%, 65%, 70%, 70% of today’s heaviest lift

Post loads to comments and BTWB

It’s a Monday night squat party!

-November 5th- Daylight Savings Time, be sure to set your clocks back an hour.

-November 11thVerve In The Community Event!! Verve will be volunteering with “A Little Help”. A Little Help goes into different communities and helps senior citizens with basic chores including maintenance, cleaning, organization, and yard work.

  • TimeSaturday, November 11th from 8am – 12pm
  • How: Click here for details on where to meet and to register 
  • What:
    • First, we’ll be meeting at 8am at South High School, 1700 E Louisiana Ave on the north lawn.
    • Second, bring any gardening tools, rakes, or gloves, along that you think may be helpful. We will also be transporting many bags of leaves from each home so make sure someone in your group has a car/truck that is up for transporting bags of leaves!
    • Third, remember to dress in layers. It starts out cold, but warms up quickly!
    • Lastly, please tell your friends and friend about us by email, on Nextdoor, or through our social sites!
  • FAQs
    • We split into group of 6-10 and will have a team leader for the group.
    • We’ll have coffee and donuts sponsored by City Donuts and Pablo’s Coffee in the morning.
    • If we have bad weather, we’ll complete our indoor jobs and save our outdoor work for our regular volunteers. Please plan to join us at check-in rain or shine.
    • Wear clothes that are comfortable and can get dirty.
    • Groups can carpool from South High to the jobs we’ll be assigning. 
    • Most teams will be going to 1-2 homes and work should be completed by noon.

Tell Your Friends! ***NOTE: YOU MUST REGISTER ON THE WEBSITE IF YOU PLAN ON VOLUNTEERING.

-November 15th- Paul finishes up his 3 part nutrition series with his 3rd and final nutrition talk. The talk will begin @ 7:30pm. This talk is free to Verve members and $10 for non-members. Everyone can sing up for this talk in MBO.

-November 23rd- Thanksgiving Day, stay tuned for an abbreviated schedule.

-The weekend of December 9th-10th, Verve will be hosting a Level 2 Certificate Course

The Level 2 Certificate Course is an intermediate- level seminar that builds on the concepts and movements introduced at the Level 1 Certificate Course. 

This course is ideally suited for any CrossFit trainer serious about delivering quality coaching. Students enhance their understanding of the CrossFit methodology, program design and implementation, and they advance their skills while coaching others in movements and workouts. Students need to come prepared to be heavily engaged; each leads individual and small-group training sessions, and classroom sessions are discussion-based. Peers and instructors provide feedback and evaluation.

For additional information and to register, click here.

 

Sunday 171029

0

3 Rounds for reps:
3 Minutes max calories on rower
2 Minutes max wallball shots, 20#(14#)
1 Minute max rope climbs
Rest 1 minute

Post reps to comments and BTWB

Why do heavy squats always make for the best #sexyfacesunday?? Jade getting after it.

 

Friday 171027

0

Deadlift
1-10-1-10-1-10

Post results to comments or BTWB

LET’S LIFT HEAVY!!

We are going to be pulling some big weight off the ground, so make sure your hips are ready.  Watch this video, come in early if you can, and do some of the mobilizations!

VERVE UPDATES

-YOGA THIS SUNDAY! Sign up, Show up, and be present with Kacey

 

Thursday 171026

0

On the minute for 25 minutes:
Minute 1 = Strict pull-ups
Minute 2 = GHD sit-up
Minute 3 = Strict HSPU
Minute 4 = Double unders
Minute 5 = Rest

Post numbers to comments and BTWB

Meet Zach Harmon, Verve’s new in-house PT.

Verve is excited to announce a new partnership with Zach Harmon of RePeak Sports & Rehab. Zach will be setting up shop in Verve several days a week, providing in-house physical therapy.

“When was the last time you got a screen to make sure your movement system is running optimally? Have you ever wondered what kind of mobility warm-up you should be doing for your specific body? Are the exercises that you are using best suited for your body type? Guess no more with a full movement screen done by a Doctor of Physical Therapy that has extensive knowledge in sport performance training who can develop a program specific to your body type to carefully choose exercises that help you get stronger. This program will help give you a detailed warm-up before workouts, a good cooldown routine after workouts, and educate you about what types of squats or deadlift variations are best for your body type. We all are uniquely shaped and our specialists at RePeak can help you stop guessing which exercises are best for you to give you the peace of mind of knowing you’re treating your body right.”

Here are some of the services Zach is able to provide:

20 Minutes Restore and Recovery: These sessions are aimed to help with post or pre workout soreness and viewed as maintance care. I will tailor it to the patient/client. It can have cupping, adjustments (manipulation: cracking), eventually needling, instrument assisted soft tissue manipulation, massage buffer, wireless electrical stimulation,  proprioceptive neuromuscular facilitation, active release technique (pin/stretch), and joint mobilizations with movement. I try to learn all the manual techniques and tailor the session for each patient.

45 or 60 Minute Physical Therapy Treatment: This includes a balanced approach of manual therapy and movement analysis/exercises for rehab.

Initial Evaluation (more of a whole body approach): Used to identify the root source of your injury. This could be highlighting a true joint restriction, stability/motor control issue, over loading or too much volume leading to injury, breathing patterns, nutrition, sleep. Then giving a detailed plan to return to crossfit while working on the problem with proper modifications.

Movement Screen: A full body screen to tell you what joints are a mobility restriction or stability/motor control issue.

Personal Training (30 or 60 min): This could be working on additional work before fulling returning to unrestricted WOD’s or working on specific skills that there may not be time for in class. OR I have some clients who are powerlifters/bodybuilders with specific goals that I work with as well.

This sounds GREAT!! So how does all this work? Well, you will not be able to just pop your head in and ask Zach to help you out with a few things. Zach will be seeing folks by apt only. But hey, how convenient is it to make an apt to see someone at the place you were already going to anyway? Zach will be taking all of his appointments via online scheduling. He does not currently have the Verve schedule set up, we will keep you updated when it goes live. For now, please feel free to explore his website (click here), which includes his pricing. Verve members will be able to enjoy the same price rates as “CrossFit DECO Members”.

Zach is excited to meet you all, he will even be enjoying a Verve class on occasion. Please remember that his services will be limited to his hours provided in the schedule and by apt only. 

Monday 171023

0

In 15 minutes build to a heavy 1 rep front squat

Rest 5 minutes then:

As many front squats as possible in 2 minutes with 70% of today’s heaviest lift.

*Bar has to remain in the front rack the whole time and a consistent pace must be maintained for all 2 minutes

Post loads to comments and BTWB

Now that's the face of someone that knows nutrition.
Now that’s the face of someone that knows nutrition.

-October 25th (Wednesday)Paul is hosting his 2nd nutrition talk in the series of three. This talk will begin @ 7:30pm. This talk is different from the last one, he will be presenting new information. This talk is free to Verve members and $10 for non-members. Everyone can sing up for this talk in MBO.

-November 5th- Daylight Savings Time, be sure to set your clocks back an hour.

-November 11thVerve In The Community Event!! Verve will be volunteering with “A Little Help”. A Little Help goes into different communities and helps senior citizens with basic chores including maintenance, cleaning, organization, and yard work.

  • TimeSaturday, November 11th from 8am – 12pm
  • How: Click here for details on where to meet and to register 
  • What:
    • First, we’ll be meeting at 8am at South High School, 1700 E Louisiana Ave on the north lawn.
    • Second, bring any gardening tools, rakes, or gloves, along that you think may be helpful. We will also be transporting many bags of leaves from each home so make sure someone in your group has a car/truck that is up for transporting bags of leaves!
    • Third, remember to dress in layers. It starts out cold, but warms up quickly!
    • Lastly, please tell your friends and friend about us by email, on Nextdoor, or through our social sites!
  • FAQs
    • We split into group of 6-10 and will have a team leader for the group.
    • We’ll have coffee and donuts sponsored by City Donuts and Pablo’s Coffee in the morning.
    • If we have bad weather, we’ll complete our indoor jobs and save our outdoor work for our regular volunteers. Please plan to join us at check-in rain or shine.
    • Wear clothes that are comfortable and can get dirty.
    • Groups can carpool from South High to the jobs we’ll be assigning. 
    • Most teams will be going to 1-2 homes and work should be completed by noon.

Tell Your Friends! ***NOTE: YOU MUST REGISTER ON THE WEBSITE IF YOU PLAN ON VOLUNTEERING.

-November 15th- Paul finishes up his 3 part nutrition series with his 3rd and final nutrition talk. The talk will begin @ 7:30pm. This talk is free to Verve members and $10 for non-members. Everyone can sing up for this talk in MBO.

-November 23rd- Thanksgiving Day, stay tuned for an abbreviated schedule.

-The weekend of December 9th-10th, Verve will be hosting a Level 2 Certificate Course

The Level 2 Certificate Course is an intermediate- level seminar that builds on the concepts and movements introduced at the Level 1 Certificate Course. 

This course is ideally suited for any CrossFit trainer serious about delivering quality coaching. Students enhance their understanding of the CrossFit methodology, program design and implementation, and they advance their skills while coaching others in movements and workouts. Students need to come prepared to be heavily engaged; each leads individual and small-group training sessions, and classroom sessions are discussion-based. Peers and instructors provide feedback and evaluation.

For additional information and to register, click here.

Sunday 171022

0

5 Rounds for time:
200m run w/ medball
20 KB sumo deadlift high pull, 24kg(16kg)
20 KB swing, 24kg(16kg)

Post time to comments and BTWB

Are you ready for some football?
Are you ready for some football?

Folks,

Don’t forget Verve’s Broncos Sunday Funday today at El Jefe!!

We are getting together at El Jefe to watch the Broncos vs Chargers, talk smack, and enjoy bottomless mimosas and bloody mary’s. 

El Jefe
2450 W. 44th Ave
Denver, CO

Game time @ 2pm